U.S., Greece Hands Off Albania!

Statement by the Committee of Communists in Athens, Greece,
The Militant, Vol.61 no.12, 24 March 1997

Working people of Albania deserve the wholehearted solidarity of their
brothers and sisters in Greece, the Balkans, and around the
world. Albanians who have rebelled against the pro-imperialist regime
of Sali Berisha are not armed criminals and Mafia operators as the
Greek government, which until yesterday supported Berisha, incessantly
echoes. They are workers, peasants, youth and other layers of society
who have been deeply affected by the economic crisis and are taking
their destiny into their own hands.

Ninety percent of industry in Albania is idle. People subsist thanks
to the remittances of immigrant workers that account for 50 percent of
Albania's gross domestic product. These are the results of the
pro-capitalist measures of the Berisha administration. The
mobilizations that started as protests after the collapse of the
“pyramid schemes,” were detonated due to the desperate
economic breakdown in the country. Working people have also put
forward broader democratic demands and turned against the secret
police and other forces of repression.

The armed protesters have taken control of major cities in the south
and sections of the army have joined them. The Berisha government has
tried unsuccessfully to drown the uprising in blood.

The insurrection of the toilers is the greatest obstacle to the
attempts to restore capitalism. The mobilizations show that despite
whatever illusions Albanian working people may have had in the
“miracle” of capitalism—illusions created by the
extreme isolation of working people during the Stalinist police state
of Enver Hoxa—they resist mightily when capitalist barbarity
cuts into the skin. Until now Berisha was the man of U.S., Italian,
and Greek capital.

The parties of Berisha and imprisoned Socialist Party leader Fatos
Nano have the same basic program. They have the perspective of the
restoration of the market system, of capitalism in Albania. They
differ only in the tempo in which such a perspective can be carried
out. They have successively ruled the country and have represented the
interests of the same social layer, the privileged bureaucratic caste
that has controlled the political and economic life of the country for
decades and shut out working people from politics.

The workers state in Albania, as elsewhere in Eastern Europe, has been
horribly deformed by the betrayal of the Albanian revolution by the
Stalinist regime. The bureaucratic methods of planning and management
of the parasitic caste in power led this state to a long-term
crisis. However, it's one thing to betray a revolution and another
to overthrow it. No matter how much these states have been deformed,
the uprising clearly shows that the pro- capitalist policies of the
bureaucratic regimes, the introduction of a few capitalist
enterprises, and the opening up of their markets to foreign investment
are not sufficient for the restoration of capitalism in the Balkans.
The overturn of nationalized property relations can occur only with a
catastrophic defeat of the toilers through a bloody imperialist
military assault.

The dream of international capitalism for an immediate exploitation of
the markets and of the labor power in Eastern Europe has been
transformed into a nightmare. In its efforts to bring back these
countries within the sphere of stable capitalist exploitation,
imperialism has and will continue to face the wrath of working people.

We must oppose imperialist intervention no matter what pretext is used
for it. Whether in the name of “restoring order,”
“humanitarian aid,” “evacuating foreign
nationals,” or “support for democratic elections,”
an intervention by the European Union (with the participation of the
Greek government) or by Washington, will be used against the workers
of Albania. U.S. and Italian troops are already in Albania. The
American, Italian and Greek fleets are in the Adriatic. A strengthened
Eighth Division of the Greek army is patrolling the Greek-Albanian
border with fingers on the trigger.

Behind the calls for the protection of the Greek-speaking minority in
southern Albania, lies the vision of Greek capitalism for expansion in
the Balkans. The uprising of the Albanian people has caused panic
among Greek capitalists—an occasion for workers to celebrate!
Some of their enterprises have been targeted as symbols of
exploitation. The government in Athens tries to convince us that the
interests of the large manufacturing, commercial and tobacco
businesses that have set up shop in Albania are also the interests of
workers in Greece. There is nothing further from the truth.

It is the policies of the Greek government that place in danger the
Greek-speaking minority and other citizens of Albania, as well as
workers and farmers in Greece, by fanning the flames for imperialist
intervention. Greek imperialism sees the Greek minority as pawns in
its foreign policy. Greek capitalism has never given up on its
historic goal of carving up southern Albania as its loot. These aims
were dealt a death blow with the revolution of the Albanian workers
and peasants in the 1940s.

Various Greek political parties shed crocodile tears for the
Greek-speaking minority; at the same time they refuse to vote for
giving these same people complete political rights when they step into
Greece.

The press is sounding the alarm on the dangers the minority faces and
the dangers of a new wave of Albanian immigrants into Greece. What is
really happening is the preparation by the Greek government of the
pretext for intervention under the cover of the European Union. They
are doing all they can so that workers in Greece are unable to
recognize that the Albanian insurgents are our natural allies. To no
avail.

The Albanian workers are giving us a taste of the struggles that will
increase in the future in many workers states. Through such battles
the workers there will construct new revolutionary parties capable of
leading them to find their way back to communism, giving an impetus to
struggles that can lead their brothers and sisters in Greece, and
other capitalist countries in the region, to take political power out
of the hands of the wealthy exploiters. Working people should demand:

U.S., Italian, and Greek hands off Albania!
Solidarity with the rebellious workers of Albania!
No to deportations!
Equal rights for Albanian and other immigrants!